Higher-earning families to get a break at Harvard

Tuition will be slashed to 10% of income for those making $180,000 a year or less, making it cheaper than UCLA.

Harvard University unveiled a financial aid program Monday that will let students from upper-middle-class families pay less than half the school's tuition starting next fall.

The move lessens the financial burden on families that make $180,000 a year or less, a group that is increasingly unable to afford to send their children to Harvard, according to university officials.

Any family that makes less than $180,000 annually will, on average, pay 10% of its income for tuition. That means any student that comes from such a family will pay less to attend Harvard than most flagship public universities, including UCLA, where tuition, room and board can be nearly $20,000 annually.

At Harvard the combined cost is $45,620 a year.

"We understand that families are feeling distress in a way they haven't felt before," said Bill Fitzsimmons, Harvard's dean of admissions and financial aid. "We want to make Harvard accessible and affordable to all Americans."

For The Record Los Angeles Times Saturday, December 15, 2007 Home Edition Main News Part A Page 2 National Desk 3 inches; 123 words Type of Material: Correction Harvard costs: An article in Tuesday's Section A said that, as a result of a major restructuring of student financial aid at Harvard University, students from families earning less than $180,000 could pay less in tuition to attend Harvard than most flagship public universities, including UCLA. The story should have made clear that it was comparing total costs -- including room and board -- for attending the institutions, not just the cost of taking classes. Although the average total cost for a student to attend UCLA can be about $20,000 annually compared with $45,620 at Harvard, in the Harvard aid program a student from a family earning less than $180,000 will, on average, pay a total cost of 10% of that family's income.

California produces the most Harvard students of any state. There were 232 Californians in last year's freshman class of 1,660, Fitzsimmons said.

Harvard began picking up the entire bill for any student whose family income was less than $40,000 in 2004. Two years later, the university did the same for students from families that made less than $60,000.

But Harvard officials said they noticed that many middle- and upper-middle-class families could barely afford the school's fees. Such families struggled to pay tuition while absorbing the rising costs of housing, insurance and, in some cases, the care of aging grandparents.

Harvard also eliminated all financial aid loans.

"We lost touch with the non-discretionary funds of these families," said Sally C. Donahue, Harvard's director of financial aid.

University officials estimate that the new program will cost an additional $22 million a year.

Some groups praised the move.

"Even if schools cannot go as far as Harvard did, many more can and should take steps in the same direction. With college costs escalating and more and more students graduating with unmanageable debt, there is no time to waste," said Robert Shireman, executive director of the Project on Student Debt.

Several other schools, such as the University of Pennsylvania, began waiving fees for students from low-income families after Harvard began its program in 2004. But it will be difficult for other colleges to follow Harvard's lead this time. The university's $34.9-billion endowment is the largest in the country.

"There will be a limited ripple effect," said USC professor William G. Tierney, director of the university's Center for Higher Education Policy Analysis.

"They're bringing to light that financial aid is an issue to the middle class, not just the poor. That's to be applauded, but in terms of having an effect to the vast majority of higher education, the effects are negligible," Tierney said.